UCR Celebrates Grand Opening of Veterans Resource Center

UC Riverside’s new Veterans Resource Center is located at Bannockburn Village. On a recent afternoon U.S. Air Force veterans Daniel Frink (left) and Mike Liu (right) discussed the benefits of now having a centralized center. samantha stanfill

RIVERSIDE, Calif. (www.ucr.edu) — The University of California, Riverside will celebrate the grand opening of its first official Veterans Resource Center on Nov. 15.

This new center, located at Bannockburn Village, offers veterans, reserves, active duty, ROTC and family members, a computer lab, a lounge, and clear access to a center coordinator and a financial aid advisor, among other services. Previous to creating this center, UCR offered student veterans a small lounge on campus.

UCR has about 100 student veterans, mostly transfers. Another 100 students are active-duty, reservists, or ROTC students. The new center was the work of current student veterans who wanted a bigger space and a centralized spot where they could find all the services they needed.

UCR’s Veterans Resource Center will be dedicated to U.S. Army Spc. Jesus Duran, an Inland Empire native and Medal of Honor recipient who returned home after the Vietnam War to work as a corrections officer in San Bernardino. Duran also dedicated much of his time to mentoring local youth, said Tami Thacker, Veteran Services coordinator. Duran died in 1977. Members of Duran’s family will be present on Nov. 15. Riverside Mayor William “Rusty” Bailey, a U.S. Army veteran, will also be present and is scheduled to give a short speech around 2 p.m.

“I envision a place that can bring our vets together as a unit,” said Thacker, a UC Santa Barbara alumna and 12-year U.S. Navy veteran. “There is a quote by journalist Walter Winchell that I use from my time with the reconnaissance Marines: ‘Never above you. Never below you. Always beside you.’ This is something vets are accustomed to with each other, keeping that one familiar thing in a place where everything is unfamiliar and will hopefully lead to success.”

Reymundo “Rey” Ruiz, current president of UCR’s Student Veteran Organization, stands outside the new Veterans Resource Center located at Bannockburn Village. samantha stanfill

Student veterans worked hard to make the center a reality, Thacker said. They organized and held meetings with leaders across campus, and now feel like they have one centralized space where they can find support and guidance as they readjust to civilian life.

The real motivator for them, though, was having an established center for future veterans, said Reymundo “Rey” Ruiz, current president of UCR’s Student Veteran Organization.

“We wanted to leave it for the new class, leave a better Veterans Center than what we had,” said Ruiz, a fourth-year sociology major who transferred from Norco Community College after completing an eight-year term with the U.S. Marines.

On a recent afternoon, a handful of students used the computer lab, others sat in the lounge area working on their personal computers, drinking coffee, and watching television.

The center is a tangible asset that shows UCR is interested – and concerned – for its student veterans, said Daniel Frink, a fourth-year U.S. Air Force veteran studying mechanical engineering. His colleague, Mike Liu, a second year MBA student and also an Air Force vet, agreed.

The space lends itself for comradery, but also shows that UCR has people in place to understand their needs and the social implications, experiences, and goals that come with being a veteran, Liu said.

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The University of California, Riverside (www.ucr.edu) is a doctoral research university, a living laboratory for groundbreaking exploration of issues critical to Inland Southern California, the state and communities around the world. Reflecting California's diverse culture, UCR's enrollment is now nearly 23,000 students. The campus opened a medical school in 2013 and has reached the heart of the Coachella Valley by way of the UCR Palm Desert Center. The campus has an annual statewide economic impact of more than $1 billion.